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Originally posted by -PLB-
reply to post by godfather420
I see that you confused ignorance and incredulity with math. Don't worry, its a common mistake among truthers. In fact, its often the primary argument.
It's not up to me to prove anything.
Calculations are not needed, how many times are you going to use this tactic when your arguments fail?
Proof is equal opposite reaction, and conservation of momentum laws.
This has been explained to you a million times, but you just want to act ignorant and pretend the laws of motion don't count and demand calculations you know can't be done.
You have to prove first of all that sagging trusses can put a pulling force on the columns.
Where are your 'calculations' for that?
Unless the phenomena can be demonstrated, the NIST report remains the hypothesis it is. Not fact, not theory, just a questionable hypothesis.
I mean you think PSF mean weight, so I have little faith in you understanding anything to do with engineering.
Originally posted by -PLB-
As for the sagging trusses, I see you are still confused by this simple concept. It has been explained to you in detail, but your state of denial is too strong. I even linked you to papers in which experimental data confirms the pull-in force. You are afraid to confront reality, which is that you are not capable of understanding simple concepts in physics. Since you don't listen to anything I say anyhow, I advice you to ask a fellow truther who has a bit more understanding of physics than yourself. Maybe you will listen to that person, although I suspect you fear this kind of confrontation and rather remain in denial.edit on 27-1-2012 by -PLB- because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by GenRadek
reply to post by ANOK
So ANOK, when any steel beam or truss is placed under a load, and then exposed to fire, what happens to said beam/truss?
I'll give you a few key words to help you in your quest:
Gravity, load, creep, plasticity, heat, time, temperature
Originally posted by ANOK
It depends? You do realise that the concrete and steel pans also took the load right? The trusses took the load of the whole floor assembly, concrete, steel pans, office contents etc. So unless the concrete and steel floor pans also sagged then the load would not cause the truss to sag.
And your point is? Time, less than one hour. Heat, not enough to cause steel to fail in less than one hour. So little heat people could stand in the very spot you claim the trusses sagged.
Originally posted by -PLB-
PERFORMANCE-BASED SIMPLIFIED MODEL FOR A STEEL BEAM AT LARGE DEFLECTION IN FIRE
In the initial stages of heating the restraint from the surrounding structure tends to resist the
expansion of a beam....
However, the run-away deflection may be attenuated when the beam starts to behave as a heated cable hanging from the surrounding structure, provided that this is also capable of redistributing and supporting the heated beam at the applied load level during the fire, as shown in Figs. 4. However, the state of stress associated with a member under a combination of catenary action and thermal bowing is not unique for a given deflection. This depends on the temperature distribution in the member, its material properties and restraint
conditions.
Catenary action certainly occurs, and has been seen to affect a heated beam’s behaviour by
preventing run-away deflection at high temperature plus applied load. The tensile axial force
grows progressively as the deflection grows provided that some horizontal reaction stiffness
exists. A change of the horizontal restraint stiffness can have a large effect on the behaviour
of the beam at high deflection, and the loading on the beam can be carried very effectively as
catenary tension replaces bending...
Originally posted by ANOK
Oh dear, you need to read and understand that yourself mate. You obvioulsy looked at the pretty pictures, and made your conclusions without understanding the text that goes with it.
This is what I have already explained, from the PDF you linked...
In the initial stages of heating the restraint from the surrounding structure tends to resist the
expansion of a beam....
And thus it sags!
First off, the WTC core columns and facade were more than capable of holding the load of the sagging trusses.
You have no evidence to the contrary. Secondly, we know the temperature distribution was not focused on the trusses, people were standing on the floors.
You also act like engineers don't take that into consideration when designing the floor assemblies. The information is known, and floors designed around those known facts. So they wouldn't build a floor assembly that could cause the columns to move in a fire due to sagging trusses. Do you think engineers are stupid?
Did you even read the conclusions?
The paper says nothing about the beam being able to pull in the columns. It's just a model 'used to predict the mid-span deflection and the tensile axial force of the heated steel beam at large deflection induced by the catenary action'.
Originally posted by -PLB-
Originally posted by ANOK
Oh dear, you need to read and understand that yourself mate. You obvioulsy looked at the pretty pictures, and made your conclusions without understanding the text that goes with it.
This is what I have already explained, from the PDF you linked...
In the initial stages of heating the restraint from the surrounding structure tends to resist the
expansion of a beam....
And thus it sags!
And? How is that contradicting the fact that sagging trusses can exert a pull-in force? Its not. Which part did I not understand? Or are you just making up nonsense in order to save your face? Lets look at the rest of your attempt to weasel yourself out of this.
And what is your point here? Is this somehow supposed to change the fact that you were incapable of understanding the simple physics behind heated sagging trusses exerting an inward pull-in force?. You think that somehow, by instead of claiming it is impossible claiming that the force is not large enough, you are masking your epic demonstration of stupidity conscerning physics? Then you are wrong.
How about this, search the first post I made about this subject (it was in a thread with your friend bsbray or something), and look up what I think about NIST's theory of sagging trusses.
The levels had to get stronger and heavier going down and lighter and weaker going up. So how could 15 stories destroy all 90?
Originally posted by psikeyhackr
So why haven't floor sections been tested in furnaces without fireproofing to see if this sagging can actually occur. The four tests that have been done so far with fireproofing did not fail.
It is so ridiculous that this is being debated without adequate data for TEN YEARS.
But then there is still the collapse problem.
A simple thought experiment which our engineering schools should have been able to simulate some time ago would be to merely remove five simulated levels from the north tower, 91, 92, 93, 94 and 95. That would leave a 60 foot gap with 15 stories floating in the air and 90 intact simulated stories below. Then let gravity take its usual immutably boring course. The bottom of the 15 stories would impact the top of the 90 in just under 2 seconds at 44 mph or 65 feet per second.
The 90 stories should be 1080 feet tall so if the 15 stories could maintain a constant 65 ft/sec while destroying them the collapse would take 16.6 second plus the 2 seconds totaling 18.6 seconds. But that is significantly longer then most estimates of collapse time therefore the 15 stories would have to accelerate while crushing stories heavier and stronger than themselves.
Now completely eliminating 5 stories to make that 2 seconds of acceleration possible is more damage than the airliner impact and fire could have done so we know that 60 feet of empty space never existed. But that thought experiment eliminates all argument about how hot the fires got because they could not instantaneously disappear five stories.
The levels had to get stronger and heavier going down and lighter and weaker going up. So how could 15 stories destroy all 90? Even assuming a 3 to 1 ratio of destruction, which I regard as unlikely, that would leave 45 stories standing which is not what happened on 9/11. So if that simulation is done and it comes nowhere near complete collapse then what is this nonsense that has been going on for more than TEN YEARS?
So why hasn’t any engineering school done such a simple simulation?
psik